Learning to Tweet

Learning to Tweet

There is no single right way to use Twitter, but using best practices, making a plan and establishing a routine can help you get the most out of your Twitter account. Use Twitter for information gathering, conversations, and sharing what others are posting, not just for broadcasting your own messages. An important thing to do before you post your first tweet, whether your account is brand new or you’re simply starting your day, is to read what other people are saying so what you post is appropriate.

Some common types of tweets are:

Announcements

While you shouldn’t only broadcast out to your following, you can and should share information with them that is relevant to who you are and what you do. Post a promotion or sale. Announce and then remind your followers of your upcoming event. Use a tweet to link to a new blog post that you've published or an article you’re company is mentioned in. tweets contain a link that followers can click on to get to more information.

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Responses

Interact with others on Twitter by using the @ sign followed by their Twitter username or handle. You can respond to something they've said publicly on Twitter or something they've said directly to you. When you reference or respond to someone using their Twitter handle, they will see what you’ve said in their Notifications and vice versa.

Reposting what someone else tweets is good form on Twitter and gives you the opportunity to share information from people, organizations or companies you trust along with your comments.

There are several ways to retweet. The first is to use the Retweet button that Twitter provides at the bottom of each tweet. When you do this, you have the choice of either retweeting the exact tweet someone else has composed including the same format with their Twitter profile image or quoting their tweet and adding your comment above it.

Two other retweeting formats take a few more steps but are still accepted. Add RT or use “via” to designate that you’re quoting someone else’s tweet, for example:

RT @AmberCadabra First thing I look at when following back? Your last tweet. Do your communications show that you're a human back there?

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Statements

A statement tweet can take the form of a quote, a tip, an opinion, a brief narrative or call to action. Others may comment on or retweet what you've said with or without comments. Here are a few examples:

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Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible. - Dalai Lama #quote

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In addition to the increase the tweet length limit from 140 characters to 280, Twitter now provides a feature letting you add comments to a tweet to create a string of tweets that form a longer narrative.

Questions

Tweet out questions to spur conversations. Others may not always notice your questions so you may receive few responses, but questions often give people the impetus to tweet back to you.

Here are some sample questions to tweet out:

Who do you always pay attention to on Twitter when they tweet? What is most interesting about them?

Business owners: What are your favorite marketing tools?

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With all the different types of tweets out there, Twitter can draw you in and consume a lot of your time. Here are a few steps to use Twitter more efficiently.

Check to see if anyone has referenced you in a tweet and respond appropriately.

Check to see if you have any direct messages or DM's and respond appropriately.

Peruse Twitter to read tweets from the accounts you follow.

Retweet a few interesting and relevant tweets to your followers.

Send out a few strategic tweets to promote your business and provide value to others.

Ask a question to see what your followers are thinking about a particular topic.

Then move on to the next important business task at hand. Return to Twitter periodically throughout the day and follow the same process without getting distracted. Set a timer if it helps you stay on track. Establish a regular process for using Twitter to help save time and keep your focus.

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